Hi Friends,
I am trying to move some files from one directory to another.
but if the destination directory doesnt exist then i have to create one and then move files to that.
For this i have to write a script.
please help.
thanks in advance
Veera (4 Replies)
Hi All,
Is there a simple and obvious way to see when an account was created.An account has come to my attention in /etc/passwd and a last on it shows having never logged in and the home directory looks to be a couple of years old.
Just wondering if I'm over looking anything obvious.
... (2 Replies)
Dear Expert,
Is there a command to do that in Unix?
In such a way that we don't need to actually "write" or
modified the content.
-- monkfan (4 Replies)
Hi Expert,
Need your scripting and finding data so that it help me to find the culprit of this memory usage error.
Data provided here is a sample.
Process Snapshot directory: /var/spool/processes-snapshot
webdev9o9% pwd
/var/spool/processes-snapshot
webdev9o9% ls -lrct
-rw-r--r-- ... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
Really stuck up with a requirement where I need to move a file (Lets say date_Employee.txt--the date will have different date values like 20120612/20120613 etc) from one directory to another based on creation/modification dates.
While visiting couple of posts, i could see we can... (3 Replies)
Hi
I am unable to find files, those are present anywhere in the same directory tree, based on the creation date. I need to find the files with their path, as I need to create them in another location and move them. I need some help with a script that may do the job.
Please help (2 Replies)
Can someone draw up a script that for every file, folder and subfolder and files that will copy the creation date over top of the modified date??
I know how to touch every file recursively, but no idea how to read a files creation date then use that to touch the modification date of that file,... (3 Replies)
Hello, how in bash i can get directory loop and order by creation date?
THX! :)
#!/bin/bash
for folder in /home/test/*
do
if ; then
echo $folder;
fi (12 Replies)